Sunday, May 25, 2025
HomeNewsFirst Peoples‘A legend in the making’

‘A legend in the making’

GADIGAL LAND: Introduced as “a legend in the making”, Dean Brady takes to the Yabun festival stage – effortlessly cool, loose shirt, broad smile.

It’s hot. The mood is joyous. Yabun is the place to be.

Recipient of the 2023 First Nations Emerging Career Development Award as well as a 2024 Dreaming Award (Creative Australia), the 21-year-old First Nations and Zimbabwean singer-songwriter is based in Meanjin (Brisbane).

His debut single, “Falling”, is clearly a crowd favourite – a gorgeous R&B song reminiscent of the Motown era, with bass-heavy off-kilter beats in the manner of contemporary producers like Kaytranada and Anderson Paak.

We sing along: “What if we fall in love …”

Brady’s commitment to craft is evident. His cool is accompanied by a natural stage presence. He clearly enjoys performing. At one point, he turns to his bandmates and says, “I really love that one!” The sense of fun is infectious.

Descended from the Gugu Yalanji and Birrigubba people and the Matabele Zimbabwean people, Dean Brady was born into a musical household. His parents were both members of the legendary “outback Motown” group Banawurun, and he grew up hearing their band practise in the living room and listening to his mother singing old soul songs as she cooked dinner.

As a child, he would perform Michael Jackson songs for friends and family, obsessing over the pop icon’s moves and sound, and even at a young age was tracing a lineage of soul singers that, eventually, would all be woven into his own musical DNA: Stevie, Marvin, Frank Sinatra, Usher. Going to a Justin Bieber concert at a formative age flicked a switch in him.

Dean Brady on the Yabun main stage, January 26. Photo: Andrew Collis

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img
- Advertisment -spot_img

Billy and crew at the Abbotts Hotel

Sunday afternoon at the Abbotts Hotel. Outside, it’s raining, winter’s on the way. We gather at a cosy corner table ...

Home at last – journey of the Gweagal Spears

Two years ago, Trinity College, the Cambridge Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, the Gujaga Foundation, and the La Perouse Local Aboriginal Land Council announced the permanent repatriation of the Gweagal Spears to the La Perouse Aboriginal community.

More than pets – portraits of love

I caught the Why We Love Our Pets exhibition on its very last day (April 29), just before the photographs were taken down. And I’m so glad I did.

Marching together – honouring service and sovereignty

Anzac Day offered a moment not only to honour all who have served but also to reflect on truth-telling and cultural protocols integral to our national story.

ALP’s second term secured amid Coalition collapse

The Australian Labor Party (ALP), led by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, has secured a decisive victory in the federal election and will form a majority government for a second term.

Volunteers’ News – May 2025

Volunteers’ News – May 2025.